Author
Aristarkhova; Irina
Year
2020
Publisher
University of Minnesota Press
Category
Tourism and Hospitality
Language
English
Pages
23
ISBN
978-1-51790-897-3
Last Update
02-Jul-2025
Keywords
Art & Art History ; Feminist & Women's Studies
On a chilly day in early 2001, Linda Hattendorf, a documentary filmmaker and editor, noticed a homeless man with a makeshift artist’s table not far from her apartment building in lower Manhattan. Attracted at first by his drawings of large colorful cats, Hattendorf started chatting with him as one artist to another. In doing so she took the first step toward extending hospitality to a stranger: she noticed him.
The man’s name was Jimmy Mirikitani. When he saw that Hattendorf had a professional-level camera, he asked her to film him. She agreed, and during the days that followed she looked...
Related
See MoreConceptualizing a Sustainable Development Model for Cultural Heritage Tourism in Asia
Re-creating Slum Tourism: Perspectives from South Africa
Antarctica, Music; sounds and cultural connections
Archaeologists in Print, Publishing for the People
Tourism Issues in the Pacific
Vermont Life Vol. 50, Iss. 4